The Seattle Star Newspaper, September 6, 1919, Page 2

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THE SEATTLE STAR WILL “GIBBET SATURDAY, SEPT, 6, 1919. 6.0. P, ORATORS PAGE 2 GOMPERS GETS WOMAN CHOKED; “ | Jaw Broken; Can’t Tell of Accident WILSON REPLY MAN ARRESTED =s:"""=tc"°<""") TREATY FOES” FOLLOW WILSON Regarding Action on Steel|Suspect Caught Peeping) \is‘irer sn, was struck by's sours |Wilson Scores Those Who) Will Trail. President With bound Meridian street car at Ninth : ‘ ; | - " ” we Conference Into Window Near Crime ee Wectiate See Thru “Jaundice Eyes Opposition Speeches | —— The attoct car, it fn maid, after] - = , e : | —————& | xt e on, co . | H BAL BY L. ©, MARTIN WASHINGTON, Sept. 6.--Samuel | #-————— ms Rael | riking the wagon, atine BY HL a (Gaited Presa att Correapencsnn Gompers, president of the American! | Continued From Page One || way pefore the number could (United Press . Z ; Skicediine of abun. lesa seneiven === ————— FE ltained, Tire laundry wagon wa KANSAS CITY, Mo., Sept. 6.— WASHING Sept. 6.— With ‘Teply from Preaident Wilson to the Q completely overturned pintoning De-| ‘The president's special train left | senatorial opponents of the treaty FOURTH NEAR PIKE. =! to sking that the president | Steet: notified the potlee Satur | yong undermeath, His hand was in-| on the first stroke of 12 o'clock | "°" nny Nt greet kell ey a ttorts to arrange an imme. | Cy: that she had been attacked * | sured d@e an injury to his jaw! for Des Maines, Iowa, where the A rks cpatereuen tiaeen aaa ware (men ee 1D ee ihe nan |DeFord suf.tered sever head wounds! pres will speak toni, fo |tour over the eround nob being « et Ye ee. “the | 78" entering her home, The man, | verwrally bruised about the| far the official schedule has been | ered by the president, 1 . gue * ers hai wary of the t . and was ger erally ar the eam p< i ake Te’e 2 Titel dente eee Coe ucte {Mahe declared anatched her purse, con: | 10d, adhered to. various senate factions today were Do you like to see a man make good? There’s an unusually ited States Steel corporatio ining some small change, ar * ° . - : i Gompera declined to make known | throwing her CONVENTION HALL, ‘counting noses” in an effort to de interesting story of the sort here tonight, tomorrow, Mon. the contents, saying he feit it would) VOY DF Ne on : c g hides ‘Vachs Salbne etreiinth . b : pat oe . be discourteoua for him to do eo,| Was het purse which tt ° | Friends of League SAS CITY ™m 5 as uesday—the story of a young chap who trav d@iscour as ; ttacked Mrs, Magalotti, left behind San ae oaiaee' Seiiiahoes day anc y! ; ce the president had not orgie oo eepared ° : : 7 ts a : rs , wMowover, It is understood the tele |, Moterevcle officers soured the Will Meet Monday] document with Jaundice 7%.” Iporan und McCormick will peak road to unhappiness, loses his money, loses his girl and is ‘ s the co ee ee ' red . who are against it because they | Fedneaday night in Chica wea Se he wale ee? eee ane wee beaene Been ‘Triod to Get Rings The Seattle ‘Treaty Ratification! Tov Cee cerivate politieal pur- {ext Wednesday night in evn forced to resign from his club, all because he was a regular Cy Wate es perene- Sah eum) | the evening, the samo| leasue, which ix the Seattle branch | eee” will ‘at fast be gibbeted and |Johnson will speak in Indianapolis rum ‘pia ot Ge te te believed. snatched the | oranization of ie Learue to Kn Son they wifl regret that the | September 11, in ‘St. Louis Septem sport— eT Presidents of the 24 national | “ d force Peace, will mieet. Monéay noon Brcssan We. : “ aS use unions of steel workers are to meet ing to Mrs ‘ohen, | eves’ cafeteria, Second and Sen.| tbbet Is so high, ber 12 and in Kansas City, Septem ine here Tuesday to hear what the presi: and Mrs Sitver. | at Moves — ities relative to} 0m told a big crowd here today. | por 15 cot a) dent will do. They are throatening |bers. In thie instance the man wax . to enn er ma Visit to Seattle, | He reiterated that it wan a ¢ req Senater Revd will speak in Akron, an ” ~ " en passed | Presiden er oe heat y y i "that the o, next Sunda d Benato: Sea ——— laud Gen trom <a Rony os ais All friends of the league of nations pol it we ‘A 3 ian produce was beet: te | ~ “N. : ag coron i vin SS eee |appeared after grabbing the purses. | {dea are invited ; , = pe |momething better than the league of|-puesday before returning soldiers of Ouner if | He obtained $4. botany call issued by wafer he: nations, or step aside 4 i |e First division. ras ; BEX : + Y i i While the officers ,were searching | fths Mere’ negation, without offering) Johnson, who in addition to be i if i ih City Firemen Put egy (for this man, Mrs. J, Lasansky,| aRRERRT I AENETS anything constructive to replace tholmg one of the biggest league foes 1] ied ee Te on Contest Drill i004 21m ave, was attacked by a Threa treaty, is Bolaheyiam, he asserted. lig looked upon as @ poasible re. st Oe a Four companies of Seattle's peer-/™an clad in a white «uit Alleged t He said he reapected the m presidential nominee, will sass’ ba Jess fire fighters were to stage acom-| After failing to wrest her purse Against Willson |!orer'y. atthe ignorantly following directly the route | “Thre 1 Hi petitive fire dri at Second ave. and | from her, he attempted to snatch her gains’ the treaty, He danounced those who|of President Wilson | it Pike st. Saturday afternoon at 12:20 |“tlamond rings from her fingers. Her] gr, LOUIS, Sept. 6—“Bome man|are agninst it for political reasona. After the Kan City epecch, | if c'clock. ‘The competition was under |#ftams frightened the man before! oo14 nave hin name go down in his Free |Johnson will probably proceed went- | i ” - . he could obtain the diamonds, 1 The Philippine imands, he sald.| ward, but other definite dates ure! the direction of Fire Chief Stetson. Na Hea DoMMR ES tory if ho had the nerve to kill the would get their independence under|yet to be announced f ‘autre weelesaies to tna tanee ths PAYS 16 CENTS FoR Pop — | President, I wish I could have tho/ing teague, ‘The league, hie declared,| Other senators will not stray so | OnE C front of the Gottstein ‘building and LONDON, Sept. 6—Can anyone | Opportunity 2 would simplify that pre \far away from Washingten, & ° ‘thie fo ahaa dectaration, aceredited to] There was great applause whenlior Reed will speak at Akron, put on an exhibition with ladders, |beat this for profiteering? A man| This ~ ) cl 7 Wickard, a salesman, recent-|the president proclaimed that thru! onto, Sunday, and Sénator Wade- | i hose, chemicals, axes, hatchets, gas|came up from Brighton in the third-| Rozier Wi Hele aie “eis Aumartoen. pods baa eis, Menangs AK SONRAOE Wels) sn masks and all. A cordon of police | class Pullman, and on the journey |ly discharged from the air service | Papen Bh aoe seme worth wa 5 anes ys | pe ‘was ready to keep the crowd of curt-| bought a bottle of gingerpop for his| with the rank of captain, led to his|mad a Salem, > . | novel. “The war was won by the Ameri can spirit.” he sald There was a wild shout from the crowd. If the treaty is beaten, those re sponsible will have a “lifelong reck oning with the fighting forces of the United Staten.” The cause he is fighting for “ls greater than the senate or the gov- ernment,” and he intends, “in office ‘and out, to Might for it as long as I tive.” “Here is the covenant of the league of nations,” he cried. “I am & covenanter. those favoring reservations. j ‘The uproar rivalied that at St Benator Lodge's proposal, adopted Louis last night, but did not con.|by the foreign relations committee, | tinue longer than two minutes, Wil-|!s a resolution which assumes that son took his seat immediately and|the United States will stay out of | paid hardly any attention to the|foreign ware over territorial in applause, merely faintly smiling at|Vasions and the like, except on the riday. A leading democratic senator to ee Soe Se Ses ees |day declared that 20 democrate will | vote for reservations to the treaty |while 27 will vote for unqualified! ratification This prediction, it was made plain, is based on the assumption that! |there will be no more thanges for| position. * Meanwhile the “mild reservation ints” and the Lodge group were try-| ing to compromise their differences over the wording of the reservation im Article 10 of the league covenant, | which ls now the real issue among ous ones out of the danger sone, larreat by federal authorities rs i eds Now Showing—The rare combination of a big play success, a lavish pré- duction, gorgeous evening and bathing costumes and, as the star, Harri. son er’s “most beautiful girl in America”— “The Discovery of America,” seriptive fan BRAMBILLA a de “A Taullaby” ++.by Brambilla MALOTTE ON THE WURLITZER Polish Dance La Paloma ..... Rondo Capricioso Mendelssohn Medley of Old Favorite: db oerenseee CONCERT—1:30 SUNDAY . Scharwenka -..+. Yradier one particularly loud outburst. Practically every one of the thou sands in the crowded hall carried a amali flag. Those, flourished with every outbreak of cheering, made & vivid spectacle. “Hurrah for President Wilson.” | yelled a man im the gallery as the! applause subsided. There was also| & yell of “Jim Reed” as the crowd shouted. Handclapping and an occasional clamer of cheering brought Wilson to hie feet bowing and waving his hat. Explains League ‘Wilson went into a detailed ex planation of the league of nations powers to prevent war, dwelling on the “boycott feature” by which of- fending nations might be Isolated. He was heard for the most part in deep, intense silence with occasional brief periods of handclappin; One of the purposes of the treaty, he sald, was to destroy autocratic authority everywhere in the world. The war, he said, included the German people an well as other peo ples. Wilson cited Russia as an ex- ample of minority rule, and de nounced the “group of men, more cruel than the cear himeelf,” who control that country, Wilson apparently is making an effort to humanize and visualize the treaty and to convince the people that the nation is facing one of the Most momentows alternatives of its history, and that if the verdict is against the treaty as it atands, the effect wil! be felt in the homes and | pocketbooks of American citizens. Rejection, he mays, will make America a militaristic power, facing disappointed, unfriendly nations in an armed world, with consequent higher living coat and eventual war. ‘This was emphasized in St. Louis speeches. Getting Acquainted Tho president says he wants to get acquainted with the people, to get | the nation’s viewpoint, and he seems to seek opportunities to get close to folks, Before the train left St. Louis, he [eat for some time on the Tear plat |form railing, swinging his leg, while hundreds massed against the iron [pickets of the train shed fence, a | few feet awny, stared, and occasion: jally burst into brief spasms of ap- |plause. Many asked for a speech, but Wilson «milingly answered, “Oh, | no," and others tried to engage him in conversation, shouting “Hello | Woody.” He nodded, grinned and waved his hat, but refused to talk Long after Wilson disappeared in side, a crowd remained staring after | the train. | Mra. Wilson received so many | flowers in St. Louis the private car Mayflower looked like a conserva- |tory. A big box of blossoms was sent | from the train to the city hospital. Speeches Popular The crowds appear to like Wil son's use of phrases, such as “con: temptible quitters,” in his eriticiam of those who do not approve of the |league, Shouts of “Swat ‘em!” and similar cries followed hia employ. | ment of that kind of language, 60 far there has been practically jno heckling, but it was expected | some questions might be shouted at |the president in Kansas City, ‘Reed's | stronghold. Wilson's reply to Gompers, tele graphed from St. Louis, was the first bit of administrative business trans. acted from the train, There prob ably will be more, ‘The president's special atopped for half an hour at Independence, Mo., near Kansas City, where Wilson breakfasted. Word quickly spread thru the town, and people came run- ning from all directions, Most of them were women. “Mother Hub- bards” and ovesalls were the popular wearing apparel of the old Missourl folk who crowded near the train, The president was kept busy shak- ing hands for about five minutes, He had a word for everybody. When one woman wished him luck, he paused in his handshaking ‘long enough to reply, gravely, ‘Thank you, madam, I sincerely appreciate that.” Let's go eat at Boldt’s—uptown, 1414 3d Ave.; downtown, 913 2d Ave. Most extreme provocations. ALLEN CASE IS IN JURY HANDS: “Political Frameup” Argued by*Defense Attorney [Continued From Page One! o'flock Friday afternoon and Trial Judge Everett Smith read his in- structions to the jury. During the four days which the taking of evidence for and against Judge Alien has consumed, it has de- veloped that the verdict will center on whether the accused jurint kept the Scotch liquor as a public official or for private and personal uses. Touching this phase of the come, | Judge Smith specifically drew the! attention of the jury to the law on | lawful and unlawful possession of in- toxicating liquor, “You are instructed,” Judge Smith informed the jury, “that on the 4th | day of June, 1919, and since said date there was and is no method whereby a person, in his individual | private capacity, could lawfully acquire posscasion of intoxicating | Maquor. “And you are instructed that the defendant in this case, during the) Ume in which it is alleged he wag in possession of intoxicating liquor, | ‘waa @ public officer, to-wit, judge of the superior court for King county, | and you are instructed that if a Public officer has in his possession intoxicating Iquor in good faith, as| public officer and without intent to/ dispose of the same unlawfully and) without intent to appropriate the same to his own use, such possession would not be unlawful. | “If you are satisfied beyond a rea sonable doubt that the defendant had in his possession some of the whisky alleged in the indictment and that he took the same into his personal | possession or kept the same in his Personal possession, not in good faith as a public officer, then you will find the defendant guilty; if you are not so satisfied then you will find him not guil Bitter Feeling Revealed Cross-examination of Judge Allen Friday afternoon by Deputy Prose outor Patterson was replete with il! concehied bitterness at times and furnished the packed court room with plenty of sensations. Judge Allen was unable to hide his hostility for Prosecuting Attorney Fred C. Brown, intimating several times during his cross-examination that “he did not put It past the Prosecuting attorney to do anything to discredit him.” At one time, when preased by Pat- terson to explain why he did not mention his possession of the much- discussed Scotch whisky to the grand Jury, Judge Allen exclaimed: “There would have been no criticism aimed at me for holding that Scotch whisky if the grand jury had been in the hands of fair-minded men.” Had Master Keys Under crossexamination, Judge Allen asserted that he had been treated “discourteousty” when he ap-| peared before the grand jury, and that Special Deputy Prosecutor John B, Hart “had hurled insulting ques. | tions» at him” in the inquisitorial | chambers. | “I did not tell the grand jury about that Scotch whisky for another rea- son,” Judge Allen declared to the jury in answer to one of Patterson's questions, “What was that reason?” demand. ed Patterson, “Well, I knew that the prone. cuting attorney's office had master keyg to every room in this building,” Judge Allen retorted, “and I had rea. son to believe that the prosecuting attorney's office, under its present leadership, would be equal to enter-| ing my chambers.” Flays Prosecution Judge Allen,” Patterson “there were 17 grand jurors, | | “Now, shouted, 4é How he pulls up, gets back his health and moral balance and takes 8 lot of other men straight along with him, is a heart-warming com that every one is enjoying. HAROLD LLOYD ol BRAY PICTOGRAPH DANIELS IS OW WAY TO ASTOR Will Inspect Proposed § marine Base Site There SAN FRANCISOO, Sept retary Daniels and tee miral Parks, head of by | yards and docks, and Rear Ads | Josiah S. McKean, assistant oti operations, today left on the Dal ship Arkansas for Astoris, als inspect the #roposed suber? |" the remainder ot’ i heduled to remain over Daniels declared. San, FEES history: Phelad. Ernest P. Russell on the Wurlitzer Larry Yoell, singing “Just for Me and Mary” OREGON IS ON WAY TO SOUND Will Be Here for Presidential Review President Wilson's reviewing ship, the battleship Oregon, was steaming northward Saturday from San Francisco destined for Seattle, The Oregon will put in first at Portland, where the cruiser Birmingham and six destroyers are reported to have arrived, and will later rejoin the great Pacific fleet for the spec- tacle in Puget Sound. § Immediately following the Oregon| Knights of Columbus, Articles in on the day of the presidential review | tended to tickle the palate of the of the fleet will be a number of| gobs will also be distributed plenti- specially chartered vessels carrying | fully aboard the various ships of the fraternal and social organization: fleet, it is announ Port Warden A. A. Paysse announced The drive for $100,000 for sailors’ Saturday. entertainment, though lagging some: Already a number of charters have| what, has resulted in more than half aa irhare wetting Bates the desired fund being collected, and Mr, Hart, Mr. ‘own and myself in| J. . Chilberg, chairman of the that grand jury room; which one of | drive, said Saturday the full amount us do y ted by night. privat t sight is in store for Bal- whisky’ lard residents when 28 destroyers “If you want my unbiased opinion,|/anda three mother ships pass thru Mr. Patterson,” Judge Allen said) the canal locks into the fresh water slowly, “I believe it would not be/basin next Saturday, The harbor past the prosecuting attorney's of-| master’s department has been in. fice to do just that thing.” | structed by the navy department to “Judge Allen,” Patterson sald, with| clear the fairway of Salmon bay, feeling, “you have known me for 15| Lake union and Lake Washington | years, haven't you?” to permit safe passage of the Mr. Patterson | Motilla anything plea: | he die tore Mall hehe | Bungalow ts derived trom the Hin- Mr. Patterson,” Judge’ Allen| cs > : ore replied, “but you associated with du word “bangla,” which means a 4n office that can do those things," thatched hut been spoken for to review the fleet. No fakirs will be allowed on the streets during the three-days' visit lof the fleet. This was definitely as- |serted by Mayor Fitzgerald, follow- |ing a report that numbers of these gentry were heading for Seattle with the avowed intent of making a “clean-up” in cheap trinkets and other baubles with which to bilk the public. “We don't want any petty swindling here,” said the mayor. An “eats hut” for the sailors will be maintained at First ave. and | Cherry st. by the National Catholic |War council, where coffee, sand, | wiches, doughnuts and “goodies” of all kinds will be dispensed free, Plenty of Eats Another movable hut of the same nature will operate up and down | Second ave, under auspices of the | scl | | reception to the “without parallel in our a telegram to Senator Washington, it became knows the secretary wired: “One million persons if as it sailed thru the | Gate, Your vision and faith ber of naval affairs Cre” been important factor Ia American navy. Reception parallel in our history. ———— Social Workers ee to Meet Mons A committee appointed purpose of considering bility of combining all workers of Seattle into & ganization will report ots p.m, at Wolf's Cafeterias 6: | Second ave, | }averyone interested in I in Seattle is invited to . HEU Or. ® ng roan ad

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